If Fidget Spinners Were Furniture: This Marble Table Has a Brass Sphere You Push Around Endlessly

Furniture should probably stay still. That’s the basic contract between you and the table: it holds your dinner plates, you don’t worry about physics. Alessio Scalabrini decided that contract was negotiable. The Animo table, produced by Italian marble workshop Serafini, features a brass sphere that rotates around a central lamp fixture, tracing concentric ripples carved into the marble surface like a tiny planet orbiting its sun. The table functions perfectly well as a static dining surface, but it also invites you to set something in motion every time you walk past it, turning what could’ve been another high-end marble slab into an interactive kinetic object that happens to hold glassware.

Named after the Italian word for Soul, the Animo table adds some animated joy with a dash of luxury to your space. The table, made entirely from Italian Rosso Levanto marble, is hand-finished with ripples that break the illusion of stillness, making it look fluid. Nestled in one of those ripples is a brass sphere, adding a dash of gold to the table’s ultra-dark burgundy and white-vein design. The result is furniture you can fidget with. It’s art and play combined brilliantly, with the kind of craftsmanship you can only expect from an Italian brand showcasing at Salone del Mobile!

Designer: Alessios Calabrini for Serafini

The table first attracts you with how it looks, then how it feels. The marble finish is impeccable, with the ripples crafted to absolute perfection. The perfection plays an important part here, because a brass sphere needs to seamlessly roll around the table, with the smoothness of a fidget spinner. The sphere has solid heft to it, giving it a fair amount of momentum when you nudge it around the table. It moves with little to no effort, completing tens of rotations before coming to a very gradual halt. Any other material would falter. Wood might end up deforming after years, metal would make the table feel unpleasant, rough stone wouldn’t cause the sphere to move as freely.

The central lamp adds another layer of functionality, illuminating the table from within while serving as the gravitational anchor for the sphere’s orbital path. The whole composition balances three distinct roles: functional dining surface, sculptural marble centerpiece, and interactive kinetic object. Most designers would’ve picked one and committed. Scalabrini made all three work simultaneously.

Scalabrini runs a Paris-based design studio with 18 years of experience merging traditional craftsmanship with contemporary fabrication technology, and that dual approach is visible throughout the Animo. The table uses Serafini’s established production methods, combining precision CNC machining with hand-finishing by Italian artisans who’ve been working marble their entire careers.

If you want to see the Animo table in person and experience the satisfying physics of that brass sphere yourself, Serafini is showing it at Salone Raritas during Salone del Mobile. The difference between seeing photos and actually pushing that orb around the channels is substantial. Photos capture the visual design, but they can’t communicate the tactile satisfaction of setting something that heavy into smooth, controlled motion.

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